Journal articles on the topic 'Perception of place'

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1

Blaut, J. M. "Place perception in perspective." Journal of Environmental Psychology 7, no. 4 (December 1987): 297–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0272-4944(87)80003-8.

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2

Wolter, Johannes, Thomas Reineking, Christoph Zetzsche, and Kerstin Schill. "From visual perception to place." Cognitive Processing 10, S2 (August 20, 2009): 351–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10339-009-0302-y.

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Ujang, Norsidah. "Affective Perception of Place: Attachment to Kuala Lumpur Historical Urban Places." Open House International 41, no. 2 (June 1, 2016): 95–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ohi-02-2016-b0012.

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Asian cities have witnessed changes in the urban landscape and social behaviour in the past decades. As a result of a continuous transformation of urban centres, the sense of place is often subdued by a global culture and imagery that may have impacted the people’s perception and experience of the city. This paper dwells into the urbanites’ relationship with historical urban places in the context of Kuala Lumpur city, Malaysia. Based on a qualitative inquiry, this paper presents the way in which these places shape the perception, knowledge, emotion, and memory of the urbanites. Findings indicate that urbanites’ experience, role, length of association, and age provided varying reactions that defined the attachment, knowledge, and memory about the places. Place attachment was reflected in the economic and cultural dependency on the places. The cultural significance of the place was manifested in its diversity within the colonial, multi-cultural, and multi-ethnic identity. Thus, reinterpretation of culture and tradition should take into consideration the continuity of place legacy, heritage, and sociocultural values. Despite the urbanites’ strong identification and knowledge of the built heritage, preserving place identity is a challenging task due to the complexity of the physical environment and the urban life.
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4

Gardener, Joanna, William Cartwright, Lesley Duxbury, and Amy Griffin. "Mapping Perception of Place through Emotion, Memory, Senses, and the Imaginary." Abstracts of the ICA 1 (July 15, 2019): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-1-87-2019.

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<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> This paper reports on a research project that has a focus on the perception of place, collective experience, and shared perceptions. It aims to demonstrate how mapping can be used to bring depth and meaning to places through portraying emotions, memory, sensation, and the imagination. This study explores how maps can be developed to create a deeper understanding and explore perceptions of place. It draws upon the diverse experiences of a participatory study of a single, shared place, the Edinburgh Gardens in North Fitzroy, Melbourne, Australia. This participatory study expands upon a previous research study of the Edinburgh Gardens, which focused on the influence of time in the perception of place. While time plays a significant role in changing perceptions of place, emotions, sensory inputs, and memory also play vital roles in shaping these perceptions.</p><p> The intent of this study was to look for shared experiences, synergies, or differences between different participants’ visits to the park, while examining how people perceive, move through, and understand the place and their emotional connection to it. Through a three-part participatory study, <i>1. Memory</i>, <i>2. Experience</i>, and <i>3. Reflection</i>, the data collected informs a series of emotional maps of the Edinburgh Gardens.</p><p> The first part of the study, <i>Memory</i>, asked participants to recall and describe a memory of an experience they had at the Edinburgh Gardens. Questions included why the event was significant, were they with other people, how long did they stay, and could they remember any smells or sounds or think of any colours associated with the experience. Participants were also asked to draw a map of the gardens as they remembered them (Figure 1). The second part of the study, <i>Experience</i>, asked participants to go for a walk in the park and capture their experience in real-time (Figure 2). This included many of the same questions as Part 1, while also asking them to record their route as they moved through the park, via a GPS walking app and pen and paper (Figure 3). The final part of the study, <i>Reflection</i>, asked participants to reflect and compare the visits to the park.</p><p> The intention of this participatory component of the research programme is to visually explore emotional connections to place by creating prototype maps of place perceptions. The study focuses on the making of place and examines how places are perceived through deep mapping and associated spatial narratives. In creating these prototype maps, it investigates how the cartographic sciences, design thinking, and artistic expression can inform one another to spark new ideas and generate new ways of thinking about approaches to cartography and in turn, the possibilities that emerge when these disciplines work together.</p><p> Through a practical and theoretical investigation into emotional cartography, this study explores perception of place and the representation of shared perceptions through mapping. Furthermore, it illustrates the role memory and conscious experience have on feelings and emotions attached to perception of place. Through creating prototypes of emotional maps, we are able to see the crossover between scientific cartography and artistic expression and appreciate how these different disciplines can be engaged to shape new approaches to cartography and reveal the map’s ability to impart emotion and evoke a sense of place.</p>
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Ratcliffe, Eleanor, and Kalevi M. Korpela. "Time- and Self-Related Memories Predict Restorative Perceptions of Favorite Places Via Place Identity." Environment and Behavior 50, no. 6 (June 7, 2017): 690–720. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013916517712002.

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Top–down processing has been highlighted as a potential, but as yet understudied, aspect of restorative environmental experience. In an online study, N = 234 adults resident in Finland rated their favorite Finnish place on measures of perceived restorativeness, perceived restorative outcomes, and place attachment, and provided qualitative descriptions of the place and a positive memory associated with it. Thematic analysis of qualitative data revealed seven themes underpinning place memories: the environment itself, activities within it, cognitive responses, emotional responses, social context, self, and time. Mediated regression analyses showed positive and significant relationships between restorative perceptions and the presence of memories of self and time, as mediated via place attachment (place identity factor). These findings emphasize the contribution of the person to the perception of their restorative experiences in places, particularly in the form of personal memories that can enhance place identity.
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Booth, Kate. "Thinking through lines: locating perception and experience in place." Qualitative Research 18, no. 3 (August 3, 2017): 361–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468794117722826.

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How one conceptualizes place in research matters. I offer a ‘line analysis’ informed by Ingold’s idea that places are ‘tissues of lines’ and argue that this enables reflexivity with regards to what counts as ‘place’, adds legitimacy to the claim that places really do matter in research, and assists in representing places as a socio-natural phenomenon that cannot be compartmentalized or reduced to a humanist understanding of the social. I trial this analysis by drawing upon interviews and focus groups with people living in the vicinity of the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona). I use references made about lines of various kinds to create a narrative that locates Mona within the everyday lives of local residents. I conclude that this museum’s impact of is more mundane than the social transformation envisaged in the Bilbao Effect as this ‘effect’ relies upon a problematic and unexamined conceptualisation of place.
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7

Stylidis, Dimitrios. "Place Attachment, Perception of Place and Residents’ Support for Tourism Development." Tourism Planning & Development 15, no. 2 (April 27, 2017): 188–210. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21568316.2017.1318775.

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8

Gregory, Richard L. "Michael Faraday–Putting Perception in its Place." Perception 20, no. 2 (April 1991): 139–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/p200139.

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9

Jones, Susan S., and Linda B. Smith. "The place of perception in children's concepts." Cognitive Development 8, no. 2 (April 1993): 113–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0885-2014(93)90008-s.

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10

Garrod, Brian. "Exploring place perception a photo-based analysis." Annals of Tourism Research 35, no. 2 (April 2008): 381–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annals.2007.09.004.

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11

Novcic Korac, Branka, and Branislav Miletic. "Differential advantages of Serbia – internal and external perspective." Management:Journal of Sustainable Business and Management Solutions in Emerging Economies 23, no. 2 (September 5, 2018): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.7595/management.fon.2018.0007.

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The purpose of the paper is to discuss concept of place and nation brand, and to analyse attributes which make place unique and differentiate it from rivals. This article presents insights into hidden perception of differential advantages of Serbia, seen through the eyes of internal (Serbian nationals) and the most important external stakeholders – business class in Italy, Austria and Slovenia. The aim is thus to gain from internal and external perception the list of unique attributes that distinguish Serbia from other countries in the region. Qualitative research combined with semantic and sentiment analysis revealed existence of certain similarities and differences in both perceptions. People and unique Serbian mentality were recognized as the greatest differential advantage of Serbia, but also some negative attributes appeared like war legacy in external perception and internal problems in internal perception. Empirical evidence proved the presence of matching differential advantages in both perceptions and pointed to necessity of applying strategic approach in managing perception of Serbia.
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Lee, Nahyun, and Bong-Seok Kim. "Can International Students’ Risk Perception and Place Image Create an Advantage in Safeguarding Place Loyalty in Post-COVID-19 Tourism?" Sustainability 14, no. 17 (August 26, 2022): 10633. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su141710633.

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International students enrolled in the long term are considered habitual residents. They act as hosts to their friends and relatives, generating word-of-mouth recommendations and revisiting the host country. In order to facilitate inbound tourism in post-COVID-19 tourism, it is necessary to understand their risk perception, place image, and loyalty and provide meaningful insights for tourism markets. This study explores how social and personal risk perception of COVID-19 and cognitive and affective place image explain place loyalty. International students for degree programs comprised the sample population for this study. Findings revealed that social risk perception negatively shapes cognitive and affective place image, while personal risk perception only explains affective place image. Both cognitive and affective place image significantly affects place loyalty and mediates between social risk perception and place loyalty. The research provides new evidence on the risk perception of COVID-19, showing that internal factors such as social and personal risk perception may cause somewhat different results contrary to previous studies. Although gender moderates the relationship between cognitive place image and loyalty, the influence of gender on the theoretical and empirical relationships between risk perception, place image, and loyalty is not significant for international students. Implications for theory and practice, limitations, and future studies are discussed.
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de Jesús, Peter, Pablo Olivos-Jara, and Oscar Navarro. "Place Identity and Traumatic Experiences in the Context of Wildfires." Sustainability 14, no. 18 (September 9, 2022): 11332. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su141811332.

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Climate change represents a threat to life; as such, it is associated with psychological disorders. The subjective perceptions of life impacts from different traumatic experiences develop understanding and the enable predictions of future consequences. This psychological impact also tends to increase the risk perception of climate change and the intention to prevent it. Greater emphasis on place identity can promote resilience and prevent psychological distress. The aim of this descriptive cross-sectional study is to describe the ontological life impact of fires, based on socio-demographic variables, risk perception, self-perceived resistance (SPR), and place identity. The sample consisted of 210 residents of areas affected by forest fires in Gran Canaria (Spain), who answered a questionnaire consisting of multiple scales and an assessment of the traumatic experience through the VIVO (Spanish initials of Ontological Vital Impact Assessment) questionnaire. The clustering of areas according to SPR and neighbourhood was considered a new variable, referred to as territorial resistance. This variable was useful in describing the different profiles of ontological life impacts and risk perceptions. The ontological life impact of the extreme experience differed between unaffected and affected people. Feeling that they had been judged for the occurrence was associated with lower psychological adjustment and a greater perception of control over the risk. Control also increased with place identity and the number of experiences. Emphasising risk, recognising the local knowledge of residents, and including them in decision-making and future action plans contributes to a sense of community, and thus, can improve coping.
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Vallejo Velazquez, Mariana, Ourania Kounadi, and Andrea Podor. "Analysis and mapping of crime perception: A quantitative approach of sketch maps." AGILE: GIScience Series 1 (July 15, 2020): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/agile-giss-1-20-2020.

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Abstract. Evidence exists that people’s perception of crime is not often consistent with the actual incidents statistics, and there is a tendency of underestimating or overestimating safety. We examine a phenomenon called the crime perception gap via participatory geographical information derived from sketch maps. The study area is Budapest, Hungary for which data were collected via a participatory platform in 2017 on the perception of safe and unsafe places. The methodology consisted of three stages; exploratory modeling, the spatial delineation of the gap, and the spatial exploration of inaccurate perceptions in relation to their surrounding environment. In stage one, we found that the variable with the highest impact on perception is the daily route. The further away a place is to personal routes the more likely it is to be perceived as unsafe. In the second stage, we computed and mapped the perceptual accuracy. The overall perceptual accuracy was as low as 39%, while many safe places were wrongly perceived as unsafe (also unsafe ones as safe). In the third stage, we identified that significant spatial patterns seem to have a diffusion effect on people’s perception. For example, a safe place could be perceived as unsafe because the neighboring places are crime hotspots (and vice versa). We argue that misperception of crime can have repercussions on peoples’ lifestyles, affect social behavior and spatial and economic dynamics. Thus, spatial analysis and mapping can be used to support police agencies in the development of strategies to reduce the misperception of crime.
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15

Fidyk, Alexandra. "Walking Meditations: Becoming Place, Place Becoming." Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies 18, no. 2 (March 16, 2021): 103–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40660.

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Interwoven through four lyric snapshots of haptic relations with place—Saskatchewan, New York, South Africa and Egypt—this philosophic rumination considers the primacy of preconscious bodily feeling to learning. Perception at base level is described as synaesthetic—the whole body sensing and moving in relation to agential landscapes. The tangled snapshots embody inter-multi-sensorial experience so to mirror the ways our bodies exist in relation to things seen and unseen. Together, the two texts, two voices, step in support of walking pedagogies as a profound praxis in service to becoming, an unfolding always underway with place, even distant and unfamiliar. Highlighted as embodied and explored, matter central to an earthly curriculum are the methods of slow, attuned, disciplined attention and somatic resonance.
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Leverentz, Andrea, Adam Pittman, and Jennifer Skinnon. "Place and Perception: Constructions of Community and Safety across Neighborhoods and Residents." City & Community 17, no. 4 (December 2018): 972–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cico.12350.

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Residents of urban neighborhoods derive a sense of place and connection to their neighborhoods through their engagement with the neighborhood, including both the people in it and its amenities. In addition, one's perception of a neighborhood shapes one's sense of safety and fear of crime. In this paper, we analyze data from 84 interviews with residents in three Boston neighborhoods that varied on demographics, crime levels, and association to stereotypes about crime. Across the three neighborhoods, long–term residents derived a sense of safety through their social ties among their neighbors, particularly other long–term residents. Newer residents, especially White residents who were attracted to a neighborhood because of aesthetics or amenities, relied on their perceptions of social and physical disorder. These perceptions were raced and classed, with newer White residents associating danger with perceptions of the proximity of lower income and Black or Latino neighbors.
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Nian, Sifeng, Fajian Liu, Min Chen, and Guoqing Cheng. "Satisfaction of Tourism Communities in World Heritage Sites based on Residents’ Perceptions—Study Area of Mount Sanqingshan National Park, PRC." Sustainability 15, no. 1 (December 28, 2022): 533. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su15010533.

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Tourist communities have enjoyed the benefits of tourist development in various regions and have paid the associated costs, resulting in different attitudes towards tourism development in World Heritage Sites. On this basis, this study takes the Mount Sanqingshan National Park, a World Natural Heritage site, collects 330 examples of perceptions of residents of tourism communities, relies on social exchange theory and community participation theory, uses structural equation modeling as a technical methodology, and constructs a conceptual model, including perceived benefits and costs, community satisfaction, and place attachment as mediating variables from the view of tourism’s social, economic, environmental, and heritage protection impacts. The study shows that: first, the perceptions of benefits have a significant positive influence on place attachment and community satisfaction; second, the perceived cost has a significant negative influence on place attachment, and a negative influence on community satisfaction does not hold true; third, place attachment has a full mediating effect on tourist cost perception and satisfaction, a partial mediating effect on tourist benefit perception and satisfaction, and a significant positive effect on community satisfaction. Finally, we propose the ‘SHE-ABC’ framework of WHS tourist community satisfaction based on the perspectives of heritage tourism impact perception and place attachment. The results of the study have theoretical value and practical guidance to sustainable development, tourist industry, and community management of World Heritage Sites.
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Padilla, M., B. Oberti, V. Boileau, N. El Jabri, and Y. Tekelioglu. "CONSUMERS AND HYDROPONIC TOMATOES: PERCEPTION AND MARKET PLACE." Acta Horticulturae, no. 747 (August 2007): 37–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.17660/actahortic.2007.747.2.

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19

Toldi, Éva. "Change of Place, Space Perception and Topographic Discourse." Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica 7, no. 1 (December 1, 2015): 95–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ausp-2015-0039.

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Abstract The paper examines the view and representation of space in Terézia Mora’s prose, primarily based on her novel entitled The Only Man on the Continent (Der einzige Mann auf dem Kontinent). In the universe of the novel the perception of space basically determines the individual’s space of action and highly influences his self-image as well as his attitude toward alterity. The city not only functions as space, but also forms a multicultural medium which becomes itself the subject of reflection and metanarration. In the novel the anthropological places and non-places, in Augé’s sense, change their function and thus the borders of referential, mental and virtual worlds are blurred, the notion of space itself is revaluated. The protagonist is the Ulysses of our days; his journeys and adventures mainly take place in his imagination. In the virtual world he loses his sense of reality, which can also be perceived in the narrative procedures of the text: the novel is in fact the protagonist’s quest for identity, his endless monologue, which is interrupted by the omniscient narrator’s comments from time to time. In the meantime the evident intertextual context also gets shape: the text maintains an ironical intertextual connection with James Joyce’s Ulysses.
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20

Larsen, Peter D. "The Place of Perception in Plato’s Tripartite Soul." Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 32, no. 1 (July 25, 2017): 69–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134417-00321p08.

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This paper considers the place of the capacity for sense perception in Plato’s tripartite soul. It argues, against a common recent interpretation, that despite being a capacity of the soul’s appetitive part, sense perception is not independent of the soul’s rational capacities. On the contrary, the soul’s ability to cognize the content that it receives through sense perception depends upon the objects and the activity of its rational capacities. Defending a position of this sort requires one to suppose that despite its partition, the soul, for Plato, is, with respect to the activity of its various parts, substantially unitary. There are, however, passages that suggest that the capacities of the non-rational soul parts, in general, and sense perception, in particular, enjoy a certain degree of autonomy and independence from reason such that they, without the input of reason, can form beliefs about and act on the basis of their content. These passages have been read as belying this supposition. It will be shown, however, that these passages are perfectly consistent with the idea that the content of the non-rational capacities of the soul depends, for its intelligibility, on the soul’s rational capacities.
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Navin, Thomas. "The Venetian City Garden: Place, Typology, and Perception." Journal of Architectural Education 63, no. 2 (March 2010): 178–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1531-314x.2010.01090.x.

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22

Stearns, Adrienne M., and Stefan A. Frisch. "Production and perception of place of articulation errors." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 120, no. 5 (November 2006): 3251. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4788308.

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23

Thomas, Craig. "Creative workers' perception of place in Edmonton Canada." Cities 132 (January 2023): 104111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2022.104111.

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Wang, Fang, Tao Xue, Ting Wang, and Bihu Wu. "The Mechanism of Tourism Risk Perception in Severe Epidemic—The Antecedent Effect of Place Image Depicted in Anti-Epidemic Music Videos and the Moderating Effect of Visiting History." Sustainability 12, no. 13 (July 6, 2020): 5454. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12135454.

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Tourism risk perception is proven to have significant influence on tourists’ decision-making behaviors, however, the impact of the place image depicted in the cultural media of destinations on it needs to be further studied. The study explores the mechanism of potential tourists’ risk perception in severe COVID-19 epidemics with the antecedent effects of the place image depicted in anti-epidemic music videos, and the impact of risk perception on potential tourists’ place attachment and travel intention, based on the risk perception theory. This study also explores the moderating effect of the visiting history on balancing risk perception, place attachment, and travel intention. With empirical research, the study result indicates that in severe epidemics: (1). The place image depicted in anti-epidemic music videos has a significant negative effect on tourism risk perception; tourism risk perception has a significant negative effect on potential tourists’ place attachment and travel intention; (2). The tourism risk perception mediates between the place image depicted in the music videos and potential tourists’ place attachment and travel intention; (3). Visiting history modulates the influence of tourism risk perception, potential tourists’ place attachment, and travel intention. This research would be helpful if it enriches the theoretical content of risk perception, expands the theoretical foundation of tourists’ decision making, promotes the application of music videos in tourism research, and proposes empirical risk management countermeasures of tourism destination.
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Rehmann-Sutter, Christoph. "An Introduction to Places." Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology 2, no. 3 (1998): 171–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853598x00181.

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AbstractThis paper draws attention to the significance of the concepts used in ecological ethics to describe nature and its parts. One of those concepts is 'place'. Place is often used to appreciate the distinct dignity of a natural situation. The meaning of that concept is explained and analysed. Four elements are proposed: (i) Places have to be seen with a special subjective inclination; (ii) places are perceived as meaningful and the relation towards them is of the hermeneutic type; (iii) places appear as open textures of relationships that cannot be demarcated; (iv) places are described from within and have centres. The perception of observers lets them participate. For observers involved in the perception of places (in this sense), responsibility for the place and its inhabitants is a direct relationship of care.
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Triyuni, Dielma, Fadhilla Fadhilla, and Liska Widya Putri. "Teenagers Perception toward Language Use in Public Place Advertisement." LANGUAGE LITERACY: Journal of Linguistics, Literature, and Language Teaching 2, no. 2 (December 17, 2018): 151. http://dx.doi.org/10.30743/ll.v2i2.648.

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This study aimed to investigate the teenagers’ perception towards language use in advertisement. Advertisement is the best way to communicate to the customers. Advertisement helps informs the customers about the brands available in the market and the variety of products useful to them. Advertisement is for everybody including kids, young and old. It is done using various media types, with different techniques and methods most suited. Advertisements are of great importance for any business activity as it attracts people to use the particular service. Most of the businessmen are using various different means of communication to reach people around the world and turn them into leads that can be further turned into potent customers. Visual content and design in advertising have a very great impact on the consumer, but it is language that helps people to identify a product and remember it. The research is done by means of descriptive qualitative method supported by questionnaire in data collection procedures. The results show that the perceptions of teenagers towards advertisements are the language used is simple and easy to remember and advertisements functions as reminder.
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Sandoval-Díaz, José Sebastián, Saron Rosa Monsalves-Peña, Viviana Vejar-Valle, and Cristobal Bravo-Ferretti. "Apego al lugar y percepción del riesgo volcánico en personas mayores de Ñuble, Chile." Revista Urbano 25, no. 46 (November 30, 2022): 08–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.22320/07183607.2022.25.46.01.

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Chile has a high degree of exposure and susceptibility to disaster risk scenarios, and it is among the top five countries in the world regarding active volcanoes. Meanwhile, sustained population aging is making the older population vulnerable to potential socio-natural disasters. This article, using these concepts, seeks to understand the relationship between place attachment and the perception of volcanic risk among the older population, focusing on older adults residing in the hazard zone of the Nevados de Chillán volcanic complex in the Ñuble Region in southern Chile. Using a phenomenological qualitative case design, 15 semi-structured interviews and a focus group were applied, with the analysis carried out based on grounded theory. The results indicate that the older population has a low perception of volcanic risk, entailing i) the minimization of the surrounding natural hazards, ii) informal knowledge based on previous experiences, and iii) ignorance of the natural risk characteristics and their negative consequences. On the other hand, it is seen that place attachment and social vulnerability act not only as contextual barriers to accepting the volcanic risk but also lead to a lack of engagement, acquisition, and deployment of individual and collective coping mechanisms. In conclusion, the authors outline the importance of including “aging in place” and the active agency of the older population in socio-natural disaster risk planning and local management processes.
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Lee, Yung-Jaan, and Shih-Ying Lin. "Effects of Perceptions of Climate Change and Flood Risk on Coping Behavior: A Case Study of Taipei, Taiwan." Sustainability 14, no. 1 (December 28, 2021): 289. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su14010289.

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Globalization and population growth have put great pressure on the environment over the last few decades, and climate change has increased associated negative effects. Researchers examine the interactions between human and the environment. Among them, the relationship between place attachment and pro-environmental behavior has attracted particular research attention. However, few studies have addressed the relationships among flood risk perceptions, place attachment, and climate change coping behavior in a densely populated urban area. This study examines the effects of perceptions of climate change and flood risk on coping behavioral intention, and determines whether place attachment plays a mediating or moderating role therein in Taipei, the flood-prone capital city of Taiwan. A total of 1208 questionnaires were collected. An analysis of the mediation effects based on a three-level regression model (Phase I) suggested that place attachment is not a mediator. Adjustment of the model and analysis of moderation effects using structural equation modeling (Phase II) suggested no moderation effect. In Phase III, the mediation effect was reexamined, with the replacement of dependent variables (adaptation/mitigation) with high-effort/low-effort coping behaviors, and one dimension of place attachment was replaced with four dimensions thereof (place dependence and place identity, place satisfaction, place affect, place social bonding). The results thus obtained reveal that the paths of place satisfaction exhibit significant mediating effects between attitudes and high-effort coping behavior. Some paths exhibit significant mediating effects between perceptions and low-effort coping behavior through place satisfaction. Another four paths exhibit partial significant mediating effects through place dependence and place identity and place social bonding. These results suggest that affective attachment of people to local places results in a behavioral tendency to protect or improve those places. The main contribution of this study is its support of meta-analyses of the effects of each dimension of place attachment to provide a better understanding of the effects of place attachment on flood risk perception and coping behavior.
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ORTÚZAR ESCUDERO, María José. "The Place of Sense Perception in Thirteenth-Century Encyclopaedias." Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 25 (December 20, 2018): 99–123. http://dx.doi.org/10.21071/refime.v25i.11635.

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Several studies have approached sense perception in the encyclopaedias of Thomas of Cantimpré, Bartholomew the Englishman and Vincent of Beauvais. Yet a systematic overview and comparison of the arrangement of sense perception in these encyclopaedias is still lacking. The overview offered here shows that all encyclopaedias place sense perception beside expositions on psychology and anatomy. There are, however, significant differences in how they treat the objects of sensation. In the case of Bartholomew and Vincent, I argue, these differences reflect two different readings of Aristotle.
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Shine, Kathryn, and Shane L. Rogers. "Parents and Teachers’ Perceptions of the Tone and Emotional Impact of Education News Coverage." Journalism and Media 2, no. 2 (May 6, 2021): 193–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia2020011.

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This study examines Australian teachers (n = 268) and parents’ (n = 206) self-reported perceptions of education news coverage and how the coverage affects them. Overall, the participants reported a perception that news coverage of teachers, schools, the education system and standardised testing was generally negative in tone. Participants reported typically feeling demoralised by negative stories and inspired by positive stories. A high importance was placed upon the public perception of education by participants. However, trust in the media reporting of educational issues was low. An exception to this general pattern of findings was that participants did not place as much importance upon the public perception of standardised testing and reported being less affected by negative or positive stories on that topic compared to the other education aspects. This research is one of the few studies to investigate the potential emotional impact that news coverage of education can have on media consumers.
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Setiyorini, Heri Puspito Diyah, Rini Andari, and Juju Masunah. "ANALYSING FACTORS FOR COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION IN TOURISM DEVELOPMENT." Journal : Tourism and Hospitality Essentials Journal 9, no. 1 (May 2, 2019): 39. http://dx.doi.org/10.17509/thej.v9i1.16988.

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This study aims to understand the perceptions of local communities to participate in tourism development. The method used in the research is a quantitative approach. Questionnaires were distributed to local communities in major destinations in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. There were 200 data set analyzed by factor analysis. The result showed that from 28 indicators of community participation, eight groups of factors formed. The groups are 1) place attachments; 2) perception of negative consequences; 3) Community Involvement; 4) Infrastructure Development; 5) Place Satisfaction; 6) Economic Benefit; 7) Government Support; 8) Community Collaboration. This result also shows that place attachment, perception of negative consequences, place satisfaction, and community collaboration have higher factor loading compares to other groups. The finding implies that in gaining community participation, these factors could be considered as the essence of communication message in raising public awareness and participation for tourism development.
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Källström, Lisa, and Jens Hultman. "Place satisfaction revisited: residents’ perceptions of “a good place to live”." Journal of Place Management and Development 12, no. 3 (August 5, 2019): 274–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jpmd-07-2017-0074.

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Purpose Using service-based logic as its theoretical lens, this study aims to approach residents’ place satisfaction in a novel way. The purpose is to explore residents’ perception of the place in which they live and to shed new light on their place satisfaction. Design/methodology/approach The paper is based on explorative qualitative focus group research. Data were collected in two typical municipalities in southern Sweden. The sampling procedure was purposive, resulting in six focus groups, consisting of a total of 33 residents. The empirical material was transcribed and analyzed using a structured content analysis inspired by grounded theory. Findings A model for understanding residents’ perceptions of what constitutes a good place to live is introduced. The model shows that many value propositions are produced in the provider sphere, independent of the user, for example by the municipality or the business sector. Other value propositions are co-created in a joint sphere, meaning that the user is actively involved in the production of these value propositions. The resident then uses different value propositions to create value-in-use in the resident sphere, independent of the provider, and to co-create value-in-use in the joint sphere. Originality/value The study creates a bridge between the stream of research on place satisfaction and studies that take stakeholders and co-creation into consideration; it shifts from the prevalent provider perspective on place branding and static place attributes to a focus on the relationship between users and providers.
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Uno, Kuniichi. "War of Perception, Perception of Time." Deleuze and Guattari Studies 12, no. 2 (May 2018): 252–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/dlgs.2018.0307.

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For Gilles Deleuze's two essays ‘Causes and Reasons of Desert Islands’ and ‘Michel Tournier and the World Without Others’, the crucial question is what the perception is, what its fundamental conditions are. A desert island can be a place to experiment on this question. The types of perception are described in many critical works about the history of art and aesthetical reflections by artists. So I will try to retrace some types of perception especially linked to the ‘haptic’, the importance of which was rediscovered by Deleuze. The ‘haptic’ proposes a type of perception not linked to space, but to time in its aspects of genesis. And something incorporeal has to intervene in a very original stage of perception and of perception of time. Thus we will be able to capture some links between the fundamental aspects of perception and time in its ‘out of joint’ aspects (Aion).
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Iqmal Mohd Azamli, Muhammad, Azmal Sabil, Asiah Abdul Rahim, Nayeem Asif, and Maliza Ismail Jamail. "Community Perception on ‘Third Place’ Generation and Planning for Enhanced Neighbourhood Interaction at Pengkalan Kubor, Malaysia." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 1022, no. 1 (May 1, 2022): 012005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1022/1/012005.

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Abstract Pengkalan Kubor at the east coast of Peninsular Malaysia is affected by limited neighbourhood interaction and liveability. A proper and good place is essential for neighbourhood interaction. There is a lack of places for social interaction, and the existing places are in poor condition and maintenance. This research aims to evaluate the impact of generating the “Third Place” to enhance neighbourhood interaction at Pengkalan Kubor. This paper seeks to identify the factors that obstruct neighbourhood interaction and evaluate the effectiveness of third place to resolve the neighbourhood interaction and improve the study context’s liveability. The questionnaire survey used for this research evaluates neighbourhood interaction. Since the study area is in Pengkalan Kubor, the respondents selected for this study were within the community. In addition to defining the neighbourhood, the survey defined the third places within the study context. The findings from the public perception of neighbourhood interaction and third place at Pengkalan Kubor may be useful for many stakeholders for public places’ future planning.
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Park, Jinah, Alastair Morrison, Bihu Wu, and Yeung Kong. "Korean Golf Tourism in China: Place, Perception and Narratives." Sustainability 10, no. 4 (April 3, 2018): 1055. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10041055.

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36

Bernadine Cocks, Jana Smith, and Graham A. Jamieson. "What Place the Normative Database in Speech Perception Research?" Journal of Cognitive Science 14, no. 4 (December 2013): 399–417. http://dx.doi.org/10.17791/jcs.2013.14.4.399.

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37

Schofield, Andrew. "Review: 3D Shape: Its Unique Place in Visual Perception." Perception 38, no. 4 (April 2009): 630–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/p3804rvw.

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38

Gow, David W. "The (non) categorical perception of place assimilated coronal stops." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 117, no. 4 (April 2005): 2571. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4788567.

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39

Bissmeyer, Susan R., Shaikat Hossain, and Raymond L. Goldsworthy. "The time and place of cochlear implant pitch perception." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 143, no. 3 (March 2018): 1933. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.5036321.

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Tavassolian, Golnaz. "Studying Legibility Perception and Pedestrian Place in Urban Identification." International Journal of Science, Technology and Society 3, no. 2 (2015): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.11648/j.ijsts.s.2015030201.32.

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Zakia, Renee A. E., and John Kingston. "The role of rate of transition in place perception." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 82, S1 (November 1987): S81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2025003.

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42

Stylidis, Dimitrios, Jason Sit, and Avital Biran. "An Exploratory Study of Residents’ Perception of Place Image." Journal of Travel Research 55, no. 5 (December 10, 2014): 659–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0047287514563163.

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43

Li, Pei, Xinde Li, Xianghui Li, Hong Pan, M. O. Khyam, Md Noor-A-Rahim, and Shuzhi Sam Ge. "Place perception from the fusion of different image representation." Pattern Recognition 110 (February 2021): 107680. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.patcog.2020.107680.

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Willett, Joanie, and Thilo Lang. "Peripheralisation: A Politics of Place, Affect, Perception and Representation." Sociologia Ruralis 58, no. 2 (March 7, 2017): 258–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/soru.12161.

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Hinch, Tom, and Shintaro Kono. "Ultramarathon runners’ perception of place: a photo-based analysis." Journal of Sport & Tourism 22, no. 2 (September 4, 2017): 109–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14775085.2017.1371065.

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46

Yazdanfar, Seyed Abbas, Ali Akbar Heidari, and Negar Aghajari. "Comparison of Architects’ and Non-Architects’ Perception of Place." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 170 (January 2015): 690–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2015.01.071.

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Bekir, Hatice, Hande Şahin, and Remzi Aydin. "University Students’ Perception on Woman's Place in a Family." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 143 (August 2014): 14–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.07.349.

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48

Gerbino, Walter. "The place of Shepard in the world of perception." Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24, no. 4 (August 2001): 669–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0140525x01360089.

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To balance Kubovy & Epstein, I evaluate the relationship between Shepard and Gestalt theorists along three dimensions. First, both discover internal universals by reducing external support. Second, they share strengths and weaknesses of the minimum principle. Third, although their attitudes toward an evolutionary account of perception is superficially different, they are fundamentally similar with respect to the internalization process. [Kubovy & Epstein; Shepard]
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Plant, Kerrie L., Hugh J. McDermott, Richard J. M. van Hoesel, Pamela W. Dawson, and Robert S. Cowan. "Factors influencing electrical place pitch perception in bimodal listeners." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 136, no. 3 (September 2014): 1199–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4892790.

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50

Kim, Jong-Ae. "Dimensions of User Perception of Academic Library as Place." Journal of Academic Librarianship 42, no. 5 (September 2016): 509–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2016.06.013.

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